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The film concentrates on two passengers having 120-year journey to another planet. Suddenly, Their hibernation pods get problem which make them wake 90 years too early. There are only Jim and Aurora on the ship with many strangenesses and difficulties. Ultimately, Do they find what they need?
Fixing the malfunctioning Avalon requires addressing the fundamental damage, but the film seems to argue that the same does not hold true for the human heart.
Passengers is an odd movie but its central questions and dilemmas are compelling and there's enough here of substance for the impressions to linger. Problems aside, it's a journey worth taking.
Passengers still manages to woo us with the kind of intense love and obsession you don't see often, especially in the world of sci-fi. And some of us tend to be suckers for stuff that has a whiff of "true love."
If the filmmakers had delved into the direness of their situation and mined it for more than just a grand-scale lovers' spat in outer space, the movie might have been more than a sleek, well-designed curiosity.
Passengers entertained me, it made me laugh, and even had me tense at times. It's one of those films that, if they ask me in the street, I say "yeah, it's ok". [Full review in Spanish]
Jennifer Lawrence and Christ Pratt are both extremely likable actors, and the situation they're in is actually a pretty interesting one. One that would have been just as interesting without the icky stalker scenario.